Inside Amazon’s warehouses, workers are treated like prisoners on parole. They are strapped with tracking devices that monitor their productivity in calculated units. These devices link performance measuring algorithms to an automated disciplinary system, where workers are docked “points” for not working hard enough, getting sick, or spending too much time in the bathroom. Amazon has more data regarding its workers than any employer in history, and they use this data to constantly optimize the process of production, quickly terminating and replacing those not operating at maximum efficiency. Maybe this is why Jeff Bezos was recently voted Worst Boss in the World.

Of course, Amazon is in the process of automating it’s warehouses, and in Bezos’ perfect world, he would only employ robots. Just as Taylorism and Fordism were the defining principles that changed the nature of work in the 20th century, Amazon is a global leader of restructuring the future of work for the emerging information economy: an economy without us.

Drivers, working through systems comparable to Lyft and Uber, shuttle products around the city in their cars, while other nodes of trucks, drones, and lockers also are being designed and deployed. Amazon is fast becoming the new WalMart, and is gaining on the retail giant as the fastest growing employer in the US. This in turn is wrecking havoc on the retail industry, which in many instances is shuttering or on the verge of crashing, as many Americans are not only buying less but also doing their shopping online.

Amazon is Wal-Mart on steroids. When companies with a global reach and supply chain move into town, their anti-competitive nature destroys the possibility of running successful local businesses. Companies like Amazon rely on corporate welfare and government pay-offs to undercut local retailers, and we’ve already seen how Amazon’s original platform as an on-line bookseller forced thousands of independent bookstores to close down. The more successful Amazon is, the more we will see farmer’s markets, neighborhood hardware stores, and clothing boutiques boarded up. It’s hard to compete with a company who’s predictive data analytics tools have not only determined which products you’re most likely to buy next week, but have already shipped those products to the distribution center closest to you, all without you ever having to think about it.

Meanwhile, a tightly surveilled and controlled tech elite are allowed to work, eat, shop, and play in newly gentrified downtown corridors, which have been cleansed via the police of homeless, the poor, and the potential insurgents.

Just days after Jeff Bezos announced he’d purchase the South Lake Union property, the first anarchists were imprisoned at the federal detention center in Seatac. By the spring of 2013, the witch hunt had ended but the local rebellion was crushed. Then the real changes hit Seattle. What we experienced in 2010 was nothing by comparison. Cranes filled the air, thousands of “Amazombies” moved to the city, and rent began its long climb beyond our reach. Everything we loved began to vanish. There was no opposition to this blitzkrieg of construction and displacement. No more building takeovers, no more beating the police, no more fires. This is how capital restructures a city. It crushes the opposition, forcibly if necessary.

In 2010, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment was around 1,000 dollars in Seattle. In 2000, it was around nine hundred dollars. Little changed in those years, even during the first tech-bubble. However, between the years 2010 and 2018, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment rose to over 2,000 dollars, if one is lucky to find something that cheap. Many luxury apartments are currently listed for 4,000 dollars a month, with some over 10,000. Renting a four-bedroom house is still possible for normal people in Seattle, with each resident paying around 700 dollars a month, although purchasing a house is impossible for all but the rich, with the average home price now at 720,000 dollars.

To make matters worse, Amazon is also pushing to build its new headquarters in an at this time, unannounced American city. It is expected that this new Amazon headquarters will lead to the rapid gentrification and stratification of that city, as well as become a testing ground for Amazon’s latest toys.

There has also been a small sprinkling in the US of clandestine sabotage actions, such as in Europe, which has involved attacks on Amazon property as well as arson attacks to trucks. According to an anonymous communique posted on Philly Anti-Capitalist:

Sparks were flying as we cut the power cables on five different amazon lockers in Philly. A small contribution to the struggle against that company and what it’s doing to our world. Motherfuckers!!

This action was completed over a few weeks in response to the calls for attacks against them. Small consistent attacks can do more over time than one spectacular operation, but seeing sparks fly while destroying what aims to destroy us is also pretty fucking spectacular.

We wrote “Fuck Amazon” on the sides of the Amazon Treasure Truck. Then we set fire to the cab. The boom we heard in the distance suggested it exploded.

There’s been almost no media coverage of this except for a short news story about a potential arson, which later got changed to a story that said that officials did not suspect any suspicious activity.

The Amazon Treasure Truck is a promotional tool for the online company. The vehicle drives around different cities, offering big deals on certain items. Officials say the cause is unknown, but the fire is not suspicious. No was was injured.

Seems some people in Philly don’t want Amazon around, but the mainstream media would rather you didn’t know about that.

Property Destruction is as American as Apple Pie

We live in a time when the State is seeking to criminalize social movements and make things that are already illegal – even more illegal. Chief among them is the push to further criminalize things which would blockade or hurt flows of commodities and energy; thus the logic to criminalize freeway blockades and anti-pipeline protest. Moreover, J20 defendants are facing upwards of 60 years, with some being charged for supposedly breaking the windows of multinational banks. To listen to the State tell it, these actions are a threat to the public, and are themselves violent and terroristic by nature.

Ironically however, rioting and property destruction have always been a key part of the creation of both the American State itself, as well as social movements which have sought basic reforms.

As Paul Gilje explains in his excellent book, Rioting in America, during the American Revolution rioting and property destruction was both common place and played a key role in the American Revolution. Far from a small “3%,” mass rioting and targeted property destruction coincided which much celebrated acts of pre-Revolution rebellion, such as the Boston Tea Party and the Boston Massacre. Mobs actions such as tar and feathering of local politicians and rioting against rising commodity prices and taxes, was also something that was popularized by immigrants from European countries in their original homelands, which of course was in part the impetuous for many European powers to push their surplus population into the Americas, for fear of a widespread revolt against class society.

Post-Revolution, rioting and property destruction remained easily available weapons in the class war from attacks against the system of slavery in the South, to the labor battles in the North. During the Depression in the 1930s and the Civil Rights era of the 1960s, it was mass rioting and often the destruction and occupation of property which pushed the elites into granting key reforms, which history now often accounts as simply the victories of formalized organizations, such as labor unions or non-violent leaders.

The other side of the coin of course, is that the American system of capitalism, resource extraction, imperialism, and policing remains incredibly violent to its core, and of course is founded upon by mass genocide, slavery, and human bondage. And now in 2018, upwards of 3.5 people per day are killed by US law enforcement. The US kills civilians and people across the globe through done strikes and sanctions. Moreover, parts of the US rival the developing world in terms of poverty and lack of access to basic needs and services, leading to a decline in US life expectancy, even for white workers.

It’s Going Down is a digital community center for anarchist, anti-fascist, autonomous anti-capitalist and anti-colonial movements. Our mission is to provide a resilient platform to publicize and promote revolutionary theory and action.